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Editorial: How to Build the International
At its conference on Eastern Europe and Russia last fall, the
International Workers Association (IWA) decided to give the responsibility
for publishing its Eastern European newsletter to the IREAN (Initiative of
Revolutionary Anarchists). The IREAN is a small propaganda group which
split from the KAS (Anarcho Syndicalist Confederation) a couple years ago.
This development startled members of KAS, who had hoped to maintain good
relations with the IWA, and see little hope that this will be the case
with IREAN filtering the information which the IWA gets about the
syndicalist movement in the countries of the former Soviet Union. Perhaps
what should trouble the international syndicalist movement is the prospect
that this may lead to IREAN's recognition as the IWA's affiliate in
Russia, and put an end to IWA efforts to bring KAS and CMOT into the
international.
We don't intend this to be a criticism of IREAN. We know very little
about IREAN and its politics. What we question is the wisdom of the IWA in
setting up an intermediary in its relations with Russian
anarcho-syndicalists without getting input from the largest syndicalist
organizations. The IREAN is a splinter group from KAS. It is therefore not
in the interests of IREAN that the IWA be on good terms with KAS. Whether
this was the IWA's intention or not, by giving official recognition to
IREAN, the IWA is furthering a split in the syndicalist movement of that
country and may be cutting itself off from the majority of Russian
syndicalists. Bringing IREAN into the IWA may give the international
another affiliate, but does this serve the cause of international
unity?
This is not the first time the IWA has permitted sectarian syndicalist
groups to draw the international into internal feuding. In 1984 we warned
the IWA about a similar situation with a group of anti-IWW syndicalists,
the Workers Solidarity Alliance (WSA), who were seeking recognition as the
IWA's U.S. affiliate. The IWA ignored these warnings, and the WSA was
given a blank check to carry on sectarian warfare against the IWW and
pro-IWW anarcho- syndicalists, all in the name of the international.
Perhaps it is not surprising that when the IWW passed a referendum in
1989(?) to affiliate with the IWA, this received no follow-up from the
IWA. The IWA decided it must rely on the judgement of WSA, who told them
to ignore the IWW's prospective affiliation.
The policy of the IWA should be to seek the widest solidarity between
syndicalist organizations of all countries. IWA Statutes allow only one
affiliate in each country. This is supposed to discourage sectarian
feuding. Ironically this rule has been used as a weapon by splinter groups
to encourage it. Knowing that the IWA rarely refuses a request for
affiliation from a country where no IWA section exists, these minority
splinter groups take advantage of the IWA's goodwill. Once they are in the
international, the IWA feels it must support these minority sections in
their political feuds, without making a serious investigation into what
these disputes are all about.
To build a strong international, the IWA needs to reassess its
affiliation process. The goal must be to federate with the majority
syndicalist organization in each country. Where splits have occurred or
where a small propaganda group seeks IWA affiliate status, the IWA should
try to get input from the majority organization before committing itself.
Certainly foot-dragging by the larger group should not stop the IWA from
having contact with sympathetic minorities. The IWA, however, needs to be
more aware of the consequences of giving these minorities official
recognition.
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